In a speech on Sunday, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker denounced fellow Democrats who have suggested that their party ought to abandon its support for marginalized groups for political gain.
Pritzker’s comments, which came at a fundraising dinner in New Hampshire, speak to the divide between Democrats who want to wage an aggressive fight against Trumpism and other Democrats who think the president and his movement may be on to something in pursuing a revanchist agenda.
In excerpts reported by The New York Times, Pritzker railed against his party for “listening to a bunch of do-nothing political types who would tell us that America’s house is not on fire, even as the flames are licking their faces.” He added: “Today, as the blaze reaches the rafters, the pundits and politicians — whose simpering timidity served as kindle for the arsonists — urge us now not to reach for a hose.”
The governor reportedly also denounced Democrats for “flocking to podcasts and cable news shows to admonish fellow Democrats for not caring enough about the struggles of working families” while “those same do-nothing Democrats want to blame our losses on our defense of Black people and trans kids and immigrants, instead of their own lack of guts and gumption.”
Pritzker’s comments might be read as a thinly veiled reference to Democrats such as California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who recently garnered backlash for launching a podcast that he has used to criticize transgender girls’ participation in sports and praise MAGA influencers like Charlie Kirk and Steve Bannon. California’s governor also received pushback from Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., after Newsom called the Trump administration’s mistaken deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia to El Salvador “the distraction of the day.”
“I think Americans are tired of elected officials or politicians who are all finger to the wind — what’s blowing this way, what’s blowing that way. And anybody who can’t stand up for the Constitution and the right of due process doesn’t deserve to lead,” Van Hollen said recently on “Meet the Press.”








